Bush Inn holds title of Australia’s oldest pub

AS soon as you set your eyes on Tasmania’s Bush Inn you can plainly see
it’s a special pub.

In fact, it holds an important place in Australian history
as the nation’s oldest continuously licensed pub.

There are others that claim the title of Australia’s oldest, but the Bush
Inn, at New Norfolk, is regarded officially as the longest trading hotel
from within same building in a nation noted for its pubs.

A plaque claiming the pub is
Australia’s oldest

For over 180 years it has served up cold ale and provided accommodation to
weary travellers.

Ann Bridger opened the pub in 1825 becoming the first of a long unbroken
line of licensees.

We were about to add to the countless number of guests that have stayed
under its roof.

Our host Barry Dabin directed us to a comfortable room decked out in period
furniture and a huge King size bed.

An early watercolour of the pub

That evening, searching for a nightcap, we clambered down the steep staircase
to the small public bar, which, surprisingly, was packed with people.

A local politician, on the campaign trail, was delivering his policies to
an audience of blokes with sweaty Akubras.

No chance of getting a drink in there, so we adjourned to the lounge where
a welcoming fire and a group of women waited contently for their partners
in the nearby public bar.

Barry Dabin took the reins of the historic pub in July 2004 after running
a pub in Canberra. He was probably used to hearing the promises droning from
the crowed public bar.

“I came to Tasmania from the mainland looking for a pub earlier in the
year,” Barry said between serving customers.

“As soon as we walked into the Bush Inn we knew it was the pub for us. You
buy a city pub and there is one on every corner. But the Bush Inn is one
of a kind. It’s a special place.

“After the pub shuts we like to sit down stairs and feel the history of
the place,” he said.

Kim began telling me one of the Bush Inn’s greatest claims to fame - the
story of how Dame Nellie Melba sang several lyrics from "Maritana" when
she stayed at the hotel on her last Tasmanian visit in 1924.

Dame Melba belted out a few tunes at the
historic pub

“I could go on for ages about the history of this place, but I won’t… well
maybe a bit,” he said.

Kim gave us a quick history lesson on New Norfolk explaining how the township
was established in 1808 when a small settlement of free farmers and convicts
were transferred from Norfolk Island, to an area upstream of Hobart Town
that had been identified as fine farming country.

The earliest image of the Bush Inn
in the 1830s

The Bush Inn was built in 1815, and in 1825 Ann Bridger became the Hotel's
first licensee Kim said.

He then showed us around the pub pointing out furniture that Mrs Bridger
brought to her new business in 1825.

The Bush Inn’s original building has survived, with some of the walls supported
on 'roughly square logs'.

Following Kim down stairs he showed us the original cellar, which remains
mostly untouched with sandstone floors and with an original skittle alley.

Kim Roberts in the 1825 pub
cellar

Not many pubs can boast a Christening font under their roof.

The font sits in the foyer of the Bush Inn along with other treasures from
the past.

In 1835, Kim explained, Methodist preachers, visiting from Hobart Town
preached in the tap room of the pub.

Another claim to fame of the Bush Inn is that the first telephone trunk
call in the Commonwealth was made from the pub by the then licensee Captain
Blockley
in 1888.
Remarkably that telephone is mounted on the wall beside the Christening font.

The first call to London was also made from the hotel on February 1 1939.

Inspired by the beautiful rural scene, as viewed from the hotel veranda and
dining room, William Vincent Wallace wrote "Scenes That Are Brightest" and
the opera "Maritana" in 1838.

An early advertisement

Broadcasting history was made at the Hotel on June 29 1932 when for the first
time, the opera "Maritana" was produced and broadcast over the
National network through station 7ZL Hobart.

The records remain in the lounge bar, mounted over the fire place, and
that’s where we settled in with our drinks on our first night at the Bush
Inn.

Bush Inn host Barry Dabin and historian
Kim Roberts with the mounted recordings of the 1932 opera Maritana,
produced and broadcast from the hotel.

The Bush Inn has three bars, five open fire places, a restaurant known
as the Melba Room, 22 bedrooms and a glassed-in dining room on the verandah.
Kim fell in love with the Bush Inn 15 years ago when he first moved to
the town from South Australia.

“I just love the atmosphere here… there are no pokies and it is alive
with history – a passion of mine,” he said.

Kim has meticulously researched the pub’s history and is always ready
to offer a yarn or two about his watering hole.

The Bush Inn in about 1900

“There are a lot of pubs making claims in Hobart now about being
the oldest pub,” he said between short gulps of his beer.

“The Guinness Book of records is the authority on records and it
recognised the Bush Inn as the longest continuous hotel licence
in Australian in
1976,” he said.
“As far as I’m concerned this is it.”

* A special thanks to Kim Roberts for supplying historic photographs and
an early history of the Bush Inn.

ooOOoo

Mick Roberts is a journalist and hotel historian. He has had
two books, The Little House on the Hill and The Local, published on the liquor
industry
and, besides other local history publications, is presently working on a
comprehensive history of the liquor industry and hotels in the Illawarra
region of NSW. His regular history feature, Looking Back, can be read in
the Northern Leader newspaper distributed throughout the northern suburbs
of Wollongong NSW. These feature articles also appear at his Looking Back
website www.slackycreek.fcpages.com

Mick is always on the lookout for pub yarns, stories, information
and old photos and can be contacted by email at slackyflat@hotmail.com or
PO BOX
5148 Wollongong 2500.